These pictures, alongside interiors, landscapes, and images from his time in Rome, Villetta Barrea, and Munich, are currently on show at Berlin’s Galerie Bastian. They are an invaluable insight into the vision of the last, and perhaps most pressing, of the abstract expressionists, and below you can click through a selection of them, taken between 1980 and 2008. His subject matter – human nature and the natural world, antiquity, masculinity, art history, the id – are here, though the view is infinitely more private than the monumental canvases for which he’s famous. It’s a look at what he saw, rather than what he made: Google Translate’s hack-job on the German-language press release mentions a “weightless subject”, which seems like a perfect description of these quiet, profound images.

Click through to see them, view the full set by visiting Galerie Bastian’s David Chipperfield-designed space on Am Kupfergraben, and read this article from 032c #19 on Cy Twombly’s interiors, as seen by Vogue in 1966, and nest in 2003.

Cy Twombly, Three Views of the Hofgarten III, taken in Munich 2008.Cy Twombly, Three Views of the Hofgarten II, taken in Munich 2008.Cy Twombly, Three Views of the Hofgarten I, taken in Munich 2008.Cy Twombly, Tulips II F, 1985, taken in Rome.

Read the “primer about digital resources for activists and supporters, including best practices for web archiving during protest, and the risks involved” here.

032c stands in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement, and the American struggle to abolish the police state, end state-sanctioned violence, and liberate Black people. From June 2 – June 6, 2020, we will donate 100% of profits from https://032c.com/store to National Bail Out and the Black Visions Collective.